Can Digital Growth Offset Rising Cost Pressures in Q3?

Can Digital Growth Offset Rising Cost Pressures in Q3?


Walmart (WMT) continues to demonstrate the power of its digital transformation, with e-commerce emerging as the clear standout in its fiscal second quarter results. As the retail giant prepares to report third-quarter earnings on Thursday, October 20, investors will be watching closely to see whether this momentum can persist amid mounting cost pressures and an increasingly cautious consumer environment.

Walmart delivered robust top-line results in its fiscal second quarter ended July 31, 2025, with global revenue reaching $177.4 billion—up from $169.3 billion the prior year. The headline figure represented 5.6% growth in constant currency terms, exceeding management’s expectations across all business segments.

What made these results particularly notable was the divergence between online and total sales growth. Global e-commerce sales surged 25% year over year—more than five times the 4.8% overall sales growth rate. Walmart’s digital growth is now markedly faster, accelerating beyond the consistent low-20% expansion range seen over the last year.

The strength was broad-based across countries and formats. In the United States, both Walmart and Sam’s Club e-commerce operations posted 26% year-over-year growth. International e-commerce grew 22%, with particularly strong performance in China, where more than half of total sales now originate online. Sam’s Club CEO Christopher Nicholas revealed that two-thirds of the warehouse club’s sales growth came from e-commerce channels.

CEO Doug McMillon attributed the strong overall performance to higher transaction volumes and increased units sold, a combination that suggests Walmart is successfully capturing market share across all income levels. Notably, upper-income households contributed the largest gains, indicating the retailer’s value proposition is resonating beyond its traditional customer base.

Perhaps more significant than the growth rate itself is the transformation in e-commerce economics. In May 2025, Walmart reached a major milestone: its first profitable quarter for e-commerce operations both in the U.S. and globally. CFO John David Rainey confirmed that “Walmart U.S. ecommerce profitability continued to increase in Q2 as we make progress on improving net delivery costs and see strong momentum in advertising.”

The path to profitability has been driven by several factors. Delivery from store—leveraging Walmart’s extensive physical footprint as a fulfillment network—grew nearly 50% in the quarter, helping to reduce last-mile delivery costs. Meanwhile, the company’s advertising business exploded 46% year over year globally, creating a high-margin revenue stream that helps offset the inherent costs of e-commerce operations.


finance.yahoo.com
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